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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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and the nsa. because you were speaking a little earlier how the nsa isn't the obble one with all -- only one with these data. >> in the interview with director mueller of the f.b.i. in march of 2011, for time magazine, it was published, he talked about the f.b.i. using stellar wind from october, basically, of 2001. so the f.b.i. has been using that data base all along, and also in march of 2011 also, he testified to the senate judiciary committee where he was saying that he could go in to the data base that he set up with the department of defense where he could go in and with one query get past all past and all future e-mails. so that says there are content being stored on people inside the united states because his response was how would you prevent a future fort hood? that meant someone become radicalized and having a terrorist act or completing a terrorist act inside this country. that means he's got access to their e-mail. so that's getting back to this massive collection that mark kline o
and the nsa. because you were speaking a little earlier how the nsa isn't the obble one with all -- only one with these data. >> in the interview with director mueller of the f.b.i. in march of 2011, for time magazine, it was published, he talked about the f.b.i. using stellar wind from october, basically, of 2001. so the f.b.i. has been using that data base all along, and also in march of 2011 also, he testified to the senate judiciary committee where he was saying that he could go in...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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i somehow attribute it to the nsa. the nsa is not the irs. let's make that clear. i would not for a moment give these powers to the irs. the nsa is probably under more surveillance -- which is ironic any otherthan operation in our country today. it is watch on a regular basis i the fisa court. i do not think we need a fisa court. has thethe president power as commander-in-chief to carry out these operations. that is what president bush claimed in the early to thousands. that is what the court has said. the reality is we will have a fisa court. in any event, it is monitored on a regular basis. 30 day reports. six month reports. if when they are tracking -- last year, only 300 times were they had to drill down a numbers -- if they make a mistake and put the wrong digit , they have to do a full report on that. they have to purge everything they got. they have to file a report with that one explaining human error that was made. that is the type of scrutiny that it is under. my experience on the intelligence committee with the nsa was, what we heard over the last severa
i somehow attribute it to the nsa. the nsa is not the irs. let's make that clear. i would not for a moment give these powers to the irs. the nsa is probably under more surveillance -- which is ironic any otherthan operation in our country today. it is watch on a regular basis i the fisa court. i do not think we need a fisa court. has thethe president power as commander-in-chief to carry out these operations. that is what president bush claimed in the early to thousands. that is what the court...
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Aug 31, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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that came out, three senior nsa officers who among them working for the nsa, they have all been whistle-blowers for the past seven years trying to go through the official whistle-blower channel, they cannot get any traction on it. that is good enough for me. i want to thank everybody for being here. robert higgs and anthony gregory and especially all of view, this is an incredibly important issue. something more important, something you can share in them. bob and anthony's book foresail at the book tableland they're here to sign the feel like and we have content on our web site, independent.org. the program will be available, there are many articles that they have written, analysis and a lot of information you can use and share with your friends and hopefully empower us to shift the culture, abolish the current state of affairs and have a much brighter future. we hope to see you again soon at another independent institute event. thank you and good night. [applause] >> you are watching booktv, nonfiction authors and books every weekend on c-span2. >> here is a look at some books being published
that came out, three senior nsa officers who among them working for the nsa, they have all been whistle-blowers for the past seven years trying to go through the official whistle-blower channel, they cannot get any traction on it. that is good enough for me. i want to thank everybody for being here. robert higgs and anthony gregory and especially all of view, this is an incredibly important issue. something more important, something you can share in them. bob and anthony's book foresail at the...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Aug 13, 2013
08/13
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WHUT
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so the nsa is taking it without my permission. google is taking it because that's my price for doing business with them. >> they had 134,000 e-mails, data about his 2,000-plus contacts, knew what he searched for and what he talked to on the telephone, et cetera. et cetera. what do you think of that? >> well, if it's me, i would say the fbi's file on me is probably larger. that's what i'd be most worried about. look, no. i tend to agree here. and this idea, john, of individuals saying you can't have this or that, i don't know how that works when the nsa obviously isn't that interested in me. but some terrorist is going to say, i'd prefer if you fellows didn't have my phone records and all the rest of it. but, you know, i'm beginning to think that the congress of the united states should rightly take a look at this and sort of limit and we should argue out exactly what they can hold and how long. >> well, they are looking at it. and the president, in his press conference on friday, basically said he wants to work with the congress o
so the nsa is taking it without my permission. google is taking it because that's my price for doing business with them. >> they had 134,000 e-mails, data about his 2,000-plus contacts, knew what he searched for and what he talked to on the telephone, et cetera. et cetera. what do you think of that? >> well, if it's me, i would say the fbi's file on me is probably larger. that's what i'd be most worried about. look, no. i tend to agree here. and this idea, john, of individuals...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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i want to go back to the nsa program. you said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not being read into the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney.[applause] when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete disreguard for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political enemies, who has shown himself willing to completely disregard the constitution, to decide i am not going to implement the employer mandate because it is inconvenient for me even though it is the law, who has shown himself frankly completely irresponsible when it comes to protecting americans' privacy, you have a lot of americans out there now, and in light of a lot of news stories we are seeing, that say the nsa made a mistake and they listened to phone calls from washington, d.c., because it has a 202 area code which is similar to t
i want to go back to the nsa program. you said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not being read into the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney.[applause] when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete disreguard for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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a new report says america's spy agency, the nsa, targeted u.n. headquarters. in minutes, what the latest allegations against the nsa could mean for washington and our allies. and when you run with the bulls, you want to dodge the horns. but there's another danger lurking in america's newest past time, the drones over the sand. no really, you have to watch out for those, too, apparently. i am harris faulkner. the pope, leader of one billion catholics around the world has spoken about syria. as you know, world governments, including our own, are pondering what to do about the civil war in syria creating millions of refugees, putting pressure on neighboring muslim countries and potentially punching holes in an already fragile imbalance there. it could be the opening for terrorists to capitalize on the chaos in syria. aside from the wrangling by the politicians and diplomats, today, pope francis called for action, urging the international community to step up efforts to help syria end the war. the pope addressed tens of thousands of worshippers in st. peter's squa
a new report says america's spy agency, the nsa, targeted u.n. headquarters. in minutes, what the latest allegations against the nsa could mean for washington and our allies. and when you run with the bulls, you want to dodge the horns. but there's another danger lurking in america's newest past time, the drones over the sand. no really, you have to watch out for those, too, apparently. i am harris faulkner. the pope, leader of one billion catholics around the world has spoken about syria. as...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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we get information from other agencies that they collect whether nsa, fbi. we are not collecting it. it is the lawfully connect the -- collected. it came after 2009 that we do not have access to some of the types of information that would help us like the underwear bomber. we had great access to threat information coming from the reports provided to us by cia, the nsa. what we do not have is the kind of access we needed to non-terrorism databases. information about individuals applying for refugee status in the united states or for visas. because what we need to do is have information and not just for a minute or a day or a week but long enough so we have the rate information from the cia, from a source, all we have is a name or a first name, what we do to compare the information to the other information we have also collected at the government has about people traveling care or seeking asylum so that we can then provided to the agencies that can act on it? it is my perspective that we were already doing it will be somewhat surprised i would have trouble doi
we get information from other agencies that they collect whether nsa, fbi. we are not collecting it. it is the lawfully connect the -- collected. it came after 2009 that we do not have access to some of the types of information that would help us like the underwear bomber. we had great access to threat information coming from the reports provided to us by cia, the nsa. what we do not have is the kind of access we needed to non-terrorism databases. information about individuals applying for...
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Aug 7, 2013
08/13
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this gets back into the nsa program. i know that many americans are still concerned about the level of intelligence collected through the nsa program but it's not only foreign intelligence. what the intelligence shows us is taking place in yemen or over in north africa. those calls are going through to parts of europe and to the united states so, yes, we may have to scale back the size. our enemies are out there making plots to ichb flikt harm on us. we need a very strong surveillance program, one in which congress has to take much greater responsibility in overseeing. that's critical to balance the liberty and also the security of this country. >> thank you very much. bill cohn. >>> and the web world is making headlines today. amazon's ceo made news by buying the washington post this week as a personal investment. they're diving into the art world. you wouldn't believe this, but they are introducing their new fine art marketplace. master pieces by andy warhol and monet are worth hundreds of millions of dollars. yahoo! c
this gets back into the nsa program. i know that many americans are still concerned about the level of intelligence collected through the nsa program but it's not only foreign intelligence. what the intelligence shows us is taking place in yemen or over in north africa. those calls are going through to parts of europe and to the united states so, yes, we may have to scale back the size. our enemies are out there making plots to ichb flikt harm on us. we need a very strong surveillance program,...
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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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why not just call the nsa and have them do the listening. oh, i forgot. the fbi doesn't talk to other agencies. isn't that whee wi didn't know about 911? the fbi and the cia weren't talking to each other? but things are different now, right? wrong. they wouldn't even tell us in new york city that the boston bomber's nectar gxt target was square. we had to hear it from the police department. so mr. president, when you talked about the most transparent administration in history, i guess you really meant that most transparent would be our phone calls and our records. terrorists, of course, excluded. >>> and this week, 22 embassies and consulates closed because of an al qaeda threat. wait a minute. here we go again. you say one thing but you do another. didn't you say in 2010 al qaeda was on the run and we were on its heels? >> hey, if you can complain about your phony scandals, i should be able to complain about your phony accomplishments. so who's on the run now? it looks like the united states. our government can't protect us, so we have to leave muslim co
why not just call the nsa and have them do the listening. oh, i forgot. the fbi doesn't talk to other agencies. isn't that whee wi didn't know about 911? the fbi and the cia weren't talking to each other? but things are different now, right? wrong. they wouldn't even tell us in new york city that the boston bomber's nectar gxt target was square. we had to hear it from the police department. so mr. president, when you talked about the most transparent administration in history, i guess you...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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nsa? >> no. >> but do you feel -- >> i feel like i'm doing my patriotic duty, and i shouldn't be afraid because of it. >> but you said you feel bullied by the nsa? >> oh, certainly. and it may -- i can't confirm whether or not it was the nsa. because it -- there are a number of federal agencies that conduct surveillance both domestically and abroad. but our government certainly has no shortage of lawyers, and isn't afraid to use them. and when they have the right people pushing the right buttons, it can certainly feel like you are being bullied especially as a small business. >> and this was your main source of income. >> this was my living. this is what i worked on for the last ten years. >> what are you doing now? >> at the moment, i'm doing volunteer work for our federal [ laughter ] >> how -- how are you paying the bills and how are you paying your defense bills? >> well, i have been fortunate when i shut down the service. i put a link on our webpage to a paypal donation page, and i ma
nsa? >> no. >> but do you feel -- >> i feel like i'm doing my patriotic duty, and i shouldn't be afraid because of it. >> but you said you feel bullied by the nsa? >> oh, certainly. and it may -- i can't confirm whether or not it was the nsa. because it -- there are a number of federal agencies that conduct surveillance both domestically and abroad. but our government certainly has no shortage of lawyers, and isn't afraid to use them. and when they have the right...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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working for the nsa, all whistle-blowers, all trying to go through the official channels. it could not give any traction on. they call edward snowden a hero. that's good enough for me. i want to thank everybody for being here. especially the is he who were here this evening. this is an incredibly important issue. probably nothing more important now. the information, we have a lot of content on the website, including many, many, many articles, analysis. a lot of information the you can take in use and share with your friends and hopefully in powerless. abolish this current state of affairs and have a much brighter future. we hope to see you again soon. thank you and goodbye. [applause] >> who would like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback. twitter.com/booktv. >> you're watching book tv on c-span2. here is our prime time lineup for tonight. >> here's some of the latest headlines around in the public to the publishing industry. author and political journalist died on wednesday, august 14th he spent 40 years in political journalism working at the baltimore sun and the was
working for the nsa, all whistle-blowers, all trying to go through the official channels. it could not give any traction on. they call edward snowden a hero. that's good enough for me. i want to thank everybody for being here. especially the is he who were here this evening. this is an incredibly important issue. probably nothing more important now. the information, we have a lot of content on the website, including many, many, many articles, analysis. a lot of information the you can take in...
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Aug 6, 2013
08/13
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KQED
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the nsa hasn't been totally kneecapped in terms of its capabilities. so i think it is an important point to keep in mind. >> it's also become quite political. yesterday on the sunday talk shows you could see a lot of congressman from both sides say look, the nsa program is working. we need to keep it going. this is presiltionly why we have it. this is why it is a defective fool and this is from democrats and republicans. i think will you see the administration use whatever intercepts were picked up on this aqap plot to show that you know despite the reservations this is an effective program and they're going to keep doing it. >> thank you very much, peter, thank you, jay. thank you very much, mark. >> thank you. >> we'll be back. stay with us. >> rose: atul gawande is here, a surgeon at boston's brigham and women's hospital. a professor at the harvard school of public health and harvard medical school and a staff writer for "the new yorker" magazine. he has written extensively and thoughtfully about the flaws of our health-care system. his readership e
the nsa hasn't been totally kneecapped in terms of its capabilities. so i think it is an important point to keep in mind. >> it's also become quite political. yesterday on the sunday talk shows you could see a lot of congressman from both sides say look, the nsa program is working. we need to keep it going. this is presiltionly why we have it. this is why it is a defective fool and this is from democrats and republicans. i think will you see the administration use whatever intercepts were...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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i have serious concerns about what's going on at the nsa. i think obviously we need more oversight, as senator mccain said. but i think we need to change the underlying patriot act and the fisa amendments of 2008. i voted against the reauthorization of the so-called patriot act because i believed it was too loosely written, there was room for abuse. so i think we need to undertake lots of reforms. the amendment, i don't think, did the trick, frankly. i think there are much more important things we need to be doing. >> so are you comfortable with the fact what we know now, which is that the nsa does take in every phone call number in america on a daily basis, brings it all in, keeps it in case they need to go look at it, they'll need a judge's okay for that and now we're learning that, yeah, they did make mistakes, some of which were in violation of the constitution, a judge later found out. and yet 3,000 instances, 2,000 instances not big, except some of those instances involved 3,000 americans whose e-mails or phone calls were then monitore
i have serious concerns about what's going on at the nsa. i think obviously we need more oversight, as senator mccain said. but i think we need to change the underlying patriot act and the fisa amendments of 2008. i voted against the reauthorization of the so-called patriot act because i believed it was too loosely written, there was room for abuse. so i think we need to undertake lots of reforms. the amendment, i don't think, did the trick, frankly. i think there are much more important things...
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Aug 5, 2013
08/13
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did it have anything to do with the nsa? i would say it would be very valuable for the administration once this has passed to give us more insight into how they knew. if they played a role, that's an important part of that debate. if it didn't, that's also an important part. >> all right, michael. thank you very much. >> thanks for having me. >>> the control for u.s. senate kicked off this weekend at a 133-year-old church picnic in a small kentucky town. it was the fancy farm kentucky that senate minority leader mitch mcconnell spent his first real day on the campaign trail and faced his two challengers for the first time. mcconnell is being pressured from two sides. on the left is democrat allison lundgrimes. on the right, tea party favorite matt bevin, who is challenging mcconnell in the gop primary. >> if senator mcconnell had his way, his version of kentucky health care for our seniors, grandmother, would be to walk it off. let's just tell it like it is. if the doctors told senator mcconnell that he had a kidney stone, h
did it have anything to do with the nsa? i would say it would be very valuable for the administration once this has passed to give us more insight into how they knew. if they played a role, that's an important part of that debate. if it didn't, that's also an important part. >> all right, michael. thank you very much. >> thanks for having me. >>> the control for u.s. senate kicked off this weekend at a 133-year-old church picnic in a small kentucky town. it was the fancy...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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well, we will be perpetually at war. >> charles mentioned in sa. -- the nsa. now that vladimir putin has granted asylum, the president says we will not have a meeting. what is your take? >> this is a collapse of the reset. obama came into office saying that relations with russia had been allowed to drift. under the bush administration -- and find that it was our fault. he was going to warm them up. he caved on missile defense in europe. he thought he would get cooperation on iraq, syria, arms control, and he has been stymied and humiliated every time. this was the final straw. it was a gratuitous poke in the eye, and he finally had to show some gumption in canceling that. he is still showing up in russia for the g-20 conference. he should have stayed home. >> he had no choice. he could not go, and edward snowden gave him the opening to do it, but as charles says, there are bigger issues -- arming syria -- everything is blowing up. to go would make him look weak. to me it was putin. >> i agree. why did it take the white house two or three weeks to make this dec
well, we will be perpetually at war. >> charles mentioned in sa. -- the nsa. now that vladimir putin has granted asylum, the president says we will not have a meeting. what is your take? >> this is a collapse of the reset. obama came into office saying that relations with russia had been allowed to drift. under the bush administration -- and find that it was our fault. he was going to warm them up. he caved on missile defense in europe. he thought he would get cooperation on iraq,...
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Aug 16, 2013
08/13
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the response of the nsa? >> it is truly shocking they are violating the surveillance laws thousands of times every year, effectively about seven times a day. in part because these laws are permissive. these aren't laws that impose meaningful restrictions. they essentially allow the nsa to collect vast amounts of information inside the united states and as we communicate internationally. the fact there are violating these very permissive laws is truly shocking. really disclosures undermine the intelligence community's primary defense of these programs, which is that there heavily regulated and overseeing. we know that is simply not true. congress is not been able to effectively oversee the nsa. now that we know the fisa court, the nsa is not able to -- in its own words, doesn't think it has the capacity to effectively oversee the nsa. the government has been claiming for years this is a regulated surveillance complex and in fact the fox has been guarding the hen house for far too long and it needs to stop. ,>
the response of the nsa? >> it is truly shocking they are violating the surveillance laws thousands of times every year, effectively about seven times a day. in part because these laws are permissive. these aren't laws that impose meaningful restrictions. they essentially allow the nsa to collect vast amounts of information inside the united states and as we communicate internationally. the fact there are violating these very permissive laws is truly shocking. really disclosures undermine...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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ALJAZAM
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do they need to worry about the nsa? >> what they need to understand is that if they are using any of those services, and really any form of electronic communication, whether it be facebook, twitter, their cell phone, text messages, all of that information is being collected and archived for up to five years, and if an analyst wants to search it, they can go back and read those emails and text messages -- >> but that's assuming -- >> we have to ask ourselves as a society if we're comfortable with that. >> that's assuming they are doing something illegal. because they are not supposed to be accessing domestic records. >> we would think that. but some of it includes hopping messages. just exchanging a message with somebody who is under surveillance can result in you being under surveillance. >> kyle asks with lavabit dead, are there any other options available? >> that's an excellent question, and one that has been asked quite a bit of me lately. and unfortunately i can't vouch for any of the services out there. all of the
do they need to worry about the nsa? >> what they need to understand is that if they are using any of those services, and really any form of electronic communication, whether it be facebook, twitter, their cell phone, text messages, all of that information is being collected and archived for up to five years, and if an analyst wants to search it, they can go back and read those emails and text messages -- >> but that's assuming -- >> we have to ask ourselves as a society if...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWS
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eye 105
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i distrust the nsa. if you go back and read a story in our newspaper in 2008, what we have learned is entirely consistent with that, if you describe the scope of the way this operation working normally. that and the snowden details have put more detail to it. in specific, the revelations about the court admonishing the nsa suggests there is a mechanism for dealing with error, at least, and potentially with abuse. >> and the administration released the court rulings, declassified them themselves, this is not a leak, so it got the information out there and it does show that there is a process by which mistakes overreaching is corrected. >> yeah, it was human operator error, it was not intentional evil grabbing e-mails and reading them. they worked with that judge, if you read down to the bottom of the statement and they corrected the problem to the satisfaction of the court and the court said problem solved. >> is your problem, james, that it's this president or is it the programs themselves? and i want to
i distrust the nsa. if you go back and read a story in our newspaper in 2008, what we have learned is entirely consistent with that, if you describe the scope of the way this operation working normally. that and the snowden details have put more detail to it. in specific, the revelations about the court admonishing the nsa suggests there is a mechanism for dealing with error, at least, and potentially with abuse. >> and the administration released the court rulings, declassified them...
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Aug 7, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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who else thinks the recent terrace is based -- is just propaganda to justify the nsa spying program? let me throw that over to the panel. does anybody believe this could be a counterplay to justify what has been said and done about edward snowden? the first person to speak will get the floor. >> >> is this something that comes to mind. >> i want to go back to the u.s. at some point. it would be a clever way to do it. you can have a real threat and at the same time you can overreact. to make people understand it is not done by a big bad government that wants to control everything, but it is linked to a real threat and real issues and real interest from an american point of view. >> the europeans will be involved for their own interests. we should not criticize the u.s. for doing something we would like to do ourselves. >> france has been engaged in similar activities and may be gone a little bit further. maybe people were surprised by the scale they were. people i know said we know this was going on anyway. is that something that might have occurred to you, that what was revealed by t
who else thinks the recent terrace is based -- is just propaganda to justify the nsa spying program? let me throw that over to the panel. does anybody believe this could be a counterplay to justify what has been said and done about edward snowden? the first person to speak will get the floor. >> >> is this something that comes to mind. >> i want to go back to the u.s. at some point. it would be a clever way to do it. you can have a real threat and at the same time you can...
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892
Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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the president is going to wake up today amid new calls for members of congress between the nsa. that includes republican senator rand paul who says it is time to ask for the opinion of the supreme court. >> you have to hear both sides. there really needs to be a discussion for people who are a little bit more skeptical of the nsa in an open court i think before the supreme court on this program. >> another republican says senator paul is wrong. senator peter king from new york says the nsa has a high batting average when it comes to preventing terror attacks and protecting individual rights. >> the senator said billions of phone calls were collected but only is00 were reported by the nsa. he says no one's rights from violated. just before president obama went on vacation he said at a res conference at the white house what we aren't hearing about is the government quote actually abusing the surveillance programs, but that's changed in the last few days. now democrats and republicans want answers. >> we will see if they get them and how soon. thank you, peter. >> we are tracking a
the president is going to wake up today amid new calls for members of congress between the nsa. that includes republican senator rand paul who says it is time to ask for the opinion of the supreme court. >> you have to hear both sides. there really needs to be a discussion for people who are a little bit more skeptical of the nsa in an open court i think before the supreme court on this program. >> another republican says senator paul is wrong. senator peter king from new york says...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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person, the nsa cannot listen to your telephone calls and the nsa cannot target your e-mails. >> then we feignind out, well, e they are but if they are, it is to combat terrorism. >> as i've said, this program is an important tool in our effort to disrupt terrorist plots and it does not allow the government to listen to any phone call without a warrant. >> yeah. like the phone call of the boston bombers. i forgot, you didn't know anything about them. even though the russians directed you to them a number of time and tamerlan should never have been allowed in the country and should have been stopped by i.s.e. and the fbi. then again the fbi and i.c. ebs don't have a way of talking to each other. or at left a that's what they say. or you need this program so that you can give the nypd a phone number in that case that they were already on top of. so now the administration says, don't worry. the fisa court protects us. it is only with that court's approval that any calls can be monitored. except enter the chief judge of the foreign intelligence surveillance court. he says that his court l
person, the nsa cannot listen to your telephone calls and the nsa cannot target your e-mails. >> then we feignind out, well, e they are but if they are, it is to combat terrorism. >> as i've said, this program is an important tool in our effort to disrupt terrorist plots and it does not allow the government to listen to any phone call without a warrant. >> yeah. like the phone call of the boston bombers. i forgot, you didn't know anything about them. even though the russians...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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WRC
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we will be perpetually at war. >> charlesentioned in sa. -- the nsa. now that vladimir putin has granted asylum, the president says we will not have a meeting. what is your take? >> this is a collapse of the reset. obama came into office saying that relations with h russia had under thed to drift. bush administration -- and find that it was our fault. he was going to warm them up.he caved on missile defense in europe. he thought hwould get cooperation on iraq, syria, arms control, and he has been stymied and humiliated every time. this was the final straw. it was a gratuitous poke in the eye, and he finally had to show some gumption in canceling that. he is still showing up in russia for the g 20 conference. he should have stayed home. >> he had no choice. he could not go, and edward snowden gave him the opening to do it, but as charles says, there are bigger issues -- arming syria -- everything is blowing up. to go would make him look weak. to me it was putin. >> i agree. why did it take the white house two or three weeks to make this decision? they c
we will be perpetually at war. >> charlesentioned in sa. -- the nsa. now that vladimir putin has granted asylum, the president says we will not have a meeting. what is your take? >> this is a collapse of the reset. obama came into office saying that relations with h russia had under thed to drift. bush administration -- and find that it was our fault. he was going to warm them up.he caved on missile defense in europe. he thought hwould get cooperation on iraq, syria, arms control,...
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Aug 31, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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you don't have to throw nsa out. democracy, you don't throw it out if you find fraud. >> david: last word from steve. as we celebrate the har-working americans that make america great. the "cashin' in" gang looking in to whether the hand-outs destroy our wonderful work ethic. that's at the bottom of the hour. right here on forbes, college grades are meaningless? find out what more employers are relying on instead when it comes to new hires and why it's firing up a major fight. so then the little tiny chipmunks go all the way up... ♪ [ female announcer ] when your swapportunity comes, take it. ♪ what? what? what? [ female announcer ] yoplait. it is so good. folks have suffered from frequent heartburn. butetting heartburn and then treating day after day is a thing of the past. block the acid with prilosec otc, and don't get heartburn in the first place. [ male announcer ] one pill each morning 24 hours. zero heartburn. >> david: employers who don't trust the college gpa judge graduates on a skills-based test. is it
you don't have to throw nsa out. democracy, you don't throw it out if you find fraud. >> david: last word from steve. as we celebrate the har-working americans that make america great. the "cashin' in" gang looking in to whether the hand-outs destroy our wonderful work ethic. that's at the bottom of the hour. right here on forbes, college grades are meaningless? find out what more employers are relying on instead when it comes to new hires and why it's firing up a major fight....
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Aug 16, 2013
08/13
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MSNBC
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it says, nsa director keith b. alexander has claimed, quote, we don't hold data on u.s. citizens. in the article government officials defended that claim with assertions that the agency's internal definition of data doesn't cover meta data like the not millions or billions but the trillions of american call records that the nsa is now known to have collected and stored since 2006. that's one tangible, you know, recorded lie that we know about. there are others because james clapper misled congress about aspects of the program. my question to you, perry, in washington, how does that aspect of this, the nsa's lies, affect the bipartisan pushback that we're seeing on the program? >> it's encouraging the pushback. you can tell members of congress -- two months ago when this program was exposed, president obama gave a press conference in which he was very defiant. basically said, this is not a scandal, people know about this. you can tell now -- i saw a member from michigan who's a republican who led the fight to defund this nsa program. had a very blistering statement today about this
it says, nsa director keith b. alexander has claimed, quote, we don't hold data on u.s. citizens. in the article government officials defended that claim with assertions that the agency's internal definition of data doesn't cover meta data like the not millions or billions but the trillions of american call records that the nsa is now known to have collected and stored since 2006. that's one tangible, you know, recorded lie that we know about. there are others because james clapper misled...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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MSNBC
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at the same time, the judge, criticizing the nsa, admitted he let something go and the nsa lied to him. look at what we're finding out. 75% of e-mail traffic is getting swept up in this surveillance. the report says it's not malicious, it was just a mistake. >> and it's probably not. >> that's the answer, everyone says, what could go wrong? this is what could go wrong. the fact that all your e-mails are going to be under the apparatus. >> none of this happens without edward snowden. let's be realistic. do we really believe clapper would have released what he did today? the nsa would be deciding they need to be forthcoming? the president tried to say that's not true, they would have done this review. maybe they'd have done some of this but there's no way we'd be seeing all this. >> i think at least chelsea manning had the courage to face judge. the big issue here is that, you know, you have not just the government having access to this but tens of thousands of private contractors, right? every american has 75% of their e-mail traffic now in the hands of contractors who may end up lettin
at the same time, the judge, criticizing the nsa, admitted he let something go and the nsa lied to him. look at what we're finding out. 75% of e-mail traffic is getting swept up in this surveillance. the report says it's not malicious, it was just a mistake. >> and it's probably not. >> that's the answer, everyone says, what could go wrong? this is what could go wrong. the fact that all your e-mails are going to be under the apparatus. >> none of this happens without edward...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN
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i would director of nsa for six years. an essay is very famous for its offense is quite -- nsa is very famous for its offense in squad. going in stealing stuff. about a fifth of the agency is defense. it also has the responsibility of protecting government secrets in the united states. not every country in the world has organized its intelligence center that way, to put the offense and defense in the same organization. we have done it that way. i think we have done it well and correctly. we have done it that way because offense and defense rotated around the same concept. that concept is vulnerability. if you mastered the vulnerability you can play offense, if you master the vulnerability you can play defense. and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. in the life of nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as to where the line is. i
i would director of nsa for six years. an essay is very famous for its offense is quite -- nsa is very famous for its offense in squad. going in stealing stuff. about a fifth of the agency is defense. it also has the responsibility of protecting government secrets in the united states. not every country in the world has organized its intelligence center that way, to put the offense and defense in the same organization. we have done it that way. i think we have done it well and correctly. we...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWS
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there are laws and rules preventing the nsa from doing the awful things. there's no evidence that they have done it. will's never been a single identifiable example of a person who was e-mailing -- e-mail read or damaged by the nsa. >> do you buy that analogy of a police? give them guns and you can abuse guns but where they donor if they do they are punished to -- capacity, nsa, to listen in on 75% of our online communications. >> i don't buy that argument. this is about collecting information. we have a government that has repeatedly undermined our rust in washington. her saying don't worry, we have this covered. it is very hard for -- to put the american people in position where they have to choose whether they will trust the government or if they don't, they are going to be accused of, you know, not helping on the war on terror. >> the 75% figure is a capacity figure and what they are capable of doing. we knew they had that, something like that capacity. weigh don't listen to that. we have access, really, to about 1m 1.6% of these communications and sma
there are laws and rules preventing the nsa from doing the awful things. there's no evidence that they have done it. will's never been a single identifiable example of a person who was e-mailing -- e-mail read or damaged by the nsa. >> do you buy that analogy of a police? give them guns and you can abuse guns but where they donor if they do they are punished to -- capacity, nsa, to listen in on 75% of our online communications. >> i don't buy that argument. this is about collecting...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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CNNW
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and that's when we started using the cell phones the nsa loves so much. and, in 1983, "the new york times" published this column titled the silent power of the nsa warning that, quote, this virtually unknown federal agency has repeatedly sought to enlarge its power without consulting the civilian officials who theoretically direct the government. that was written 30 years ago. yes, we note 1984 has long been considered the year of big brother but it looks like that may have been a year late. >>> still to come, miley cyrus's raunchy routine sparks criticism but does it add up? >>> pandemonium. another cub could be on the way. the shout out tonight and an amazing shot. colorado state university freshman has won a year's worth of tuition after sinking a half court shot during a pep rally on campus. he was selected randomly and given three opportunities to make the shot. he only needed one. it's a very similar shot to the one we saw from a ball state freshman last week, amazing. wow. look at that. the student won a semester's worth of free tuition and the sho
and that's when we started using the cell phones the nsa loves so much. and, in 1983, "the new york times" published this column titled the silent power of the nsa warning that, quote, this virtually unknown federal agency has repeatedly sought to enlarge its power without consulting the civilian officials who theoretically direct the government. that was written 30 years ago. yes, we note 1984 has long been considered the year of big brother but it looks like that may have been a...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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obama trying to convince us that nsa's spying the for our own good. as more details surface about the excessive effort should we be concerned? are the media concerned? >> conflictses in the middle east continue to heat up. chemical attacks in syria. killing more than a
obama trying to convince us that nsa's spying the for our own good. as more details surface about the excessive effort should we be concerned? are the media concerned? >> conflictses in the middle east continue to heat up. chemical attacks in syria. killing more than a
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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new allegations rock the nsa. documents leaked why former nsa contractor edward snowden detail thousands of privacy violations by the agency after repeated denials from the white house. >> what you are not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs. >> john: we'll discuss with a key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nsa kentucky senator rand paul. then, another week of chaos in egypt as the interim government's crackdown on supporters of ousted president mohammed morsi leaves hundreds of people dead. >> our traditional cooperation cannot continue
new allegations rock the nsa. documents leaked why former nsa contractor edward snowden detail thousands of privacy violations by the agency after repeated denials from the white house. >> what you are not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs. >> john: we'll discuss with a key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nsa kentucky senator rand paul. then, another week of chaos in egypt as the interim government's crackdown on supporters...
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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. >>> and still to come, new developments in the nsa investigation. warning signs in 1983 that were ignored. >>> and switzerland's controversial plan to combat prostitution. why the swiss government thinks sex boxes are a good idea. >>> and the latest from the massive wildfire out west. san francisco's water and power supply, in danger! ck on her fee. [ all gasp ] oj, veggies -- you're cool. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! 'cause i'm re-workin' the menu, keeping her healthy and you on your toes. [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, and 9 grams of protein. i see you, cupcake! uh-oh! [ bottle ] the number one doctor recommended brand. ensure®. nutrition in charge™. [ bottle ] the number one doctor recommended brand. the math of retirement is different today.ek. money has to last longer. i don't want to pour over pie charts all day. i want to travel, and i want the income to do it. ishares incomes etfs. low cost and diversified. find out why nine out of ten l
. >>> and still to come, new developments in the nsa investigation. warning signs in 1983 that were ignored. >>> and switzerland's controversial plan to combat prostitution. why the swiss government thinks sex boxes are a good idea. >>> and the latest from the massive wildfire out west. san francisco's water and power supply, in danger! ck on her fee. [ all gasp ] oj, veggies -- you're cool. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! 'cause i'm re-workin' the menu,...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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MSNBC
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how did the president's comments -- how did they change the debate over the nsa program? or did they change the debate? >> they changed the debate some. if you look back two months ago when the snowden information first came out, he struck a defiant tone. he essentially said nothing's wrong here, no one's looking at your phone records. he sort of questioned what the debate was about. if you look now, there was a voting congress, the majority of democrats said they wanted to defund this program. if you look at these changes, michael hayden is right, the program has not been changed. the president didn't say the program did anything wrong. that said, he has moved to where he's now conceding there's a public uprising, both among conservatives and liberals, and trying to find a way to square the circle, make people who are traditional allies of the president like dick durbin, and ron wyden, he's trying to talk them through that, while defending the program overall as well. >> president obama friday again strongly condemning snowden's actions. this is the exchange that he had
how did the president's comments -- how did they change the debate over the nsa program? or did they change the debate? >> they changed the debate some. if you look back two months ago when the snowden information first came out, he struck a defiant tone. he essentially said nothing's wrong here, no one's looking at your phone records. he sort of questioned what the debate was about. if you look now, there was a voting congress, the majority of democrats said they wanted to defund this...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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the nsa are a type of police. they wanted the judiciary. an independent, open judiciary response toive to the people wi open debate in public. i think the constitutionalty of these programs need to be questioned and there needs to be a supreme court decision that looks at whether or not what they're doing is constitutional or not. >> joining us now is john roberts, who's filling in for chris wallace this morning. good morning, john. >> one of the problems senator rand paul sees is that why the intelligence surveillance court is the one that gives the nsa these blanket warrants they also do not have the power to initiate an independent investigation into compliance. he thinks that's something that needs to be looked at as well. it's pretty clear, eric, when congress comes back here to capitol hill in a couple of weeks it's going to be a big topic of discussion. i would expect, too, the subject of congressional hearings. another guest on the program today, congressman peter king of new york, doesn't see what all the fuss is about. he says whe
the nsa are a type of police. they wanted the judiciary. an independent, open judiciary response toive to the people wi open debate in public. i think the constitutionalty of these programs need to be questioned and there needs to be a supreme court decision that looks at whether or not what they're doing is constitutional or not. >> joining us now is john roberts, who's filling in for chris wallace this morning. good morning, john. >> one of the problems senator rand paul sees is...
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Aug 30, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> neil: it's not just the nsa. the "washington post" reporting the cia and other spying agencies are getting 53 million bucks a year. that's a lot of money to spy on us and they sort of take out of that same pot to do this. a reason why it says, cut the cash now. the problem with that, it's easier said than done. these agencies can come back and say, you take money from us, it's all on you. go ahead. what do you think? >> that's certainly the case they make everytime people talk about cutting budgets. they say we need this money to keep america safe, and then when you ask -- you follow up and ask, why do you need this money? specifically? explain how this money, this funding for these programs is going to keep us safe. they say, look, we can't tell you because that would be revealing secrets. so just trust us. and so there's this kind of game going on where they say we really need this money to protect you but we can't tell you why. >> neil: you know what i worry about? i'll try to explain it in a way that doesn't
. >> neil: it's not just the nsa. the "washington post" reporting the cia and other spying agencies are getting 53 million bucks a year. that's a lot of money to spy on us and they sort of take out of that same pot to do this. a reason why it says, cut the cash now. the problem with that, it's easier said than done. these agencies can come back and say, you take money from us, it's all on you. go ahead. what do you think? >> that's certainly the case they make everytime...